To begin with, to evolve is what life does, — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is that the microphysical is known to be prior in time to the larger and more complex physical "whole" — Metaphysician Undercover
...constraints from the higher level not only help to select the lower level-trajectory but also pull it into its future at the same time. Top-down causality is a form of final causality’
(Development and Evolution 1993, p.270)
I am interested in the transition from unconscious algorithmic thinking to conscious thinking. — Ypan1944
In any case it's not my job to define 'experience' by fiat. The definition, or concept of consciousness, I take to be a given. — bert1
I'm not sure, but I'm considering the possibility that all causation is psychological, or at least reducible to the psychological. So the difference that consciousness makes is that without it, nothing would happen at all. I've been meaning to start a thread about that for a while to think it through, but haven't got to it. — bert1
Consciousness is the capacity to experience. — bert1
Hence — bert1
Chalmers is not hypostatizing, he is not imputing substance to consciousness. — hypericin
He's talking about self-consciousness, the kind of self you can be aware of and introspect, I believe. — Srap Tasmaner
It does feel like something to do that, but not because doing that peculiarly necessitates feeling like something. It feels like something because panpsychism is true. — bert1
What do you make of the emphasis on the 'first person' point of view that started this discussion? — Paine
...the point being that his opponents ‘will have to give us some idea of how the existence of consciousness might be entailed by the physical facts’, — frank
But Peirce also includes idealist and vaguely spiritual sentiments that you yourself are inclined to reject — Wayfarer
Calling it a neural model doesn't explain anything, though? Its like when Dennet calls it an illusion. HOW and WHY are a bunch of atoms able to, together, create a model of the world that manifests itself as such a thing like the sensation of pain? — Francis
But it has a broader remit than science, because its concerns include the subjective realm, it doesn’t stop at the analysis of objects and forces. — Wayfarer
That includes consideration of the human condition and its discontents, few of which are amenable to a strictly scientific formulation, and also where in the general scheme of things humanity belongs (from a broader perspective than is provided by evolutionary biology.) — Wayfarer
Panpsychism is not the conclusion of the p-zombie argument. — frank
The conceivability argument is an epistemic argument against materialism, starting with an epistemological premise and proceeding to a metaphysical conclusion.
...Materialists do not just curl up and die when confronted with the conceivability argument
and its cousins. Type-A materialists reject the epistemic premise, holding for example that
zombies are not conceivable. Type-B materialists reject the step from an epistemic premise to an ontological conclusion, holding for example that conceivability does not entail possibility.
...If panpsychism is correct, there is microexperience and there are microphenomenal
properties. We are not in a position to say much about what microexperience is like.
...I think that constitutive Russellian panpsychism is perhaps the most important form of
panpsychism, precisely because it is this form that promises to avoid the problems of physicalism and dualism and to serve as a Hegelian synthesis. In particular, one can argue that this view avoids both the conceivability argument against physicalism and the causal argument against dualism.
https://consc.net/papers/panpsychism.pdf
But why is any experience at all correlated with that? — bert1
Oh, and who? — Wayfarer
G. F. Stout argued that if epiphenomenalism (the more familiar name for the ‘conscious automaton’ theory) is true,
it ought to be quite credible that the constitution and course of nature would be otherwise just the same as it is if there were not and never had been any experiencing individuals. Human bodies would still have gone through the motions of making and using bridges, telephones and telegraphs, of writing and reading books, of speaking in Parliament, of arguing about materialism, and so on. There can be no doubt that this is prima facie incredible to Common Sense (Stout 1931: 138f.).
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/zombies/
Because macro characteristics/properties emerge from micro characteristics/properties. — Patterner
No ontological conclusions are being drawn from it. — frank
You don't get academic tenure for that, — Wayfarer
I've come to realise the cogency of the 'philosophical zombies' argument, having always dismissed it up until now. — Wayfarer
The point of the argument is that if there were a creature that looked and acted like a human being, there would be no empirical way of telling whether they were subjects of experience or not. — Wayfarer
Chalmers proposes the concept of "naturalistic dualism" as an alternative to traditional Cartesian Dualism. — Wayfarer
...but which may not be fully explicable within physicalist scientific frameworks. — Wayfarer
Yes, it's annoying that he's gone on to become a tenured academic at New York University, author/editor of half a dozen anthologies on philosophy of mind, and that rarest of things, a well-known philosopher. You'd think we could have expected something better from a Bronze Medallist at the International Mathematics Olympiad. — Wayfarer
spin and charge are two separate properties of particles. — Francis
Physicists have actually managed to model the behavior of some particles by separating them into "quasi-particles" in which one has the spin and one has the charge. — Francis
Matter has causally relevant "properties" anyway you slice it. — Francis
He thinks it's a property, like spin charge and mass — bert1
'Reification of consciousness' is definitely a problem, but it is not Chalmer's problem. The root of reification is 'reify' meaning 'to make a thing out of', from the Latin root Res, 'thing'. And it was Descartes that designated the mind as 'res cogitans', literally a 'thinking thing' (not even thinking being.) This has had many profound and deleterious consequences, crystallised in the depiction of the mind as 'the ghost in the machine'. — Wayfarer
I find it particularly interesting that RNA is an intermediate between DNA and protein. Not random I'd imagine. Maybe this is the primordial species? How might RNA behave more like a protein than DNA does? We must do some research I think. — Benj96
I think the difference is that in a strawman the act is to simplify and ridicule, but in this case the act is to retreat to something solid and simple. — Christoffer
You mean, ‘manifested’. — Wayfarer

As outlined in this paper - http://www.rpgroup.caltech.edu/publications/Phillips2006.pdf - and in this book - http://lifesratchet.com/ - the nanoscale turns out to a convergence zone where all the key structure-creating forces of nature become equal in size, and coincide with the thermal properties/temperature scale of liquid water.
So at a scale of 10^-9 metres (the average distance of energetic interactions between molecules) and 10^-20 joules (the average background energy due to the “warmth” of water), all the many different kinds of energy become effectively the same. Elastic energy, electrostatic energy, chemical bond energy, thermal energy – every kind of action is suddenly equivalent in strength. And thus easily interconvertible. There is no real cost, no energetic barrier, to turning one kind of action into another kind of action. And so also – from a semiotic or informational viewpoint – no real problem getting in there and regulating the action. It is like a railway system where you can switch trains on to other tracks at virtually zero cost. The mystery of how “immaterial” information can control material processes disappears because the conversion of one kind of action into a different kind of action has been made cost-free in energetic terms. Matter is already acting symbolically in this regard.
This cross-over zone had to happen due to the fact that there is a transistion from quantum to classical behaviour in the material world. As the micro-scale, the physics of objects is ruled by surface area effects. Molecular structures have a lot of surface area and very little volume, so the geometry dominates when it comes to the substantial properties being exhibited. The shapes are what matter more than what the shapes are made of. But then at the macro-scale, it is the collective bulk effects that take over. The nature of a substance is determined now by the kinds of atoms present, the types of bonds, the ratios of the elements.
The actual crossing over in terms of the forces involved is between the steadily waning strength of electromagnetic binding energy – the attraction between positive and negative charges weakens proportionately with distance – and the steadily increasing strength of bulk properties such as the stability of chemical, elastic, and other kinds of mechanical or structural bonds. Get enough atoms together and they start to reinforce each others behaviour.
So you have quantum scale substance where the emergent character is based on geometric properties, and classical scale substance where it is based on bulk properties. And this is even when still talking about the same apparent “stuff”. If you probe a film of water perhaps five or six molecules thick with a super-fine needle, you can start to feel the bumps of extra resistance as you push through each layer. But at a larger scale of interaction, water just has its generalised bulk identity – the one that conforms to our folk intuitions about liquidity.
So the big finding is the way that constrasting forces of nature suddenly find themselves in vanilla harmony at a certain critical scale of being. It is kind of like the unification scale for fundamental physics, but this is the fundamental scale of nature for biology – and also mind, given that both life and mind are dependent on the emergence of semiotic machinery
Why does socially constructed change the fact that there is a sensation any more than the rods and cones? — schopenhauer1
The terrain is matter not experience and the map is semiosis, but where’s the experiential aspect? — schopenhauer1
